THIS IS A Catholic blog. I am a Catholic journalist and author. If you enjoy this Blog, you'll probably enjoy my books - so contact me (via a Comment to this blog) and ask me about them.
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Where will you be...
...on the evening of |December 16th? If you are in Sussex, why not come to English Martyrs Church, Goring, and hear about "Sussex saints and martyrs"? (Scroll down on that link under "Events" to find out more).
Some years ago you posted that you were sending some gold chocolate coins to your nieces and nephews for the Feast of St Nicholas of Bari. I thought this was a lovely idea and as I now have a 2 1/2 yo great niece I sent her a bag of gold coins. When she is a little older I will enclose in the parcel the story of St Nicholas and I hope to have grandchildren to send the coins to also.
Thank you for posting about this lovely idea. Traditions and pieties add colour to the cloth of the Faith. It is a pity that so much of the genuine colour was done away with after Vatican II e.g. Corpus Christi processions, May Crownings etc and when people began to hunger for they knew not what the traditional pieties were replaced by clown Masses, giant puppets and liturgical dancing.
Thank you for this. Last week I posted three bags of chocolate coins to three nieces, together with a box of turkish delight and a note about St Nicolas...
Corpus Christi processions are back - and in some cases never disappeared - at least in London. Just the other day we were discussing plans for our local one in 2010 in the suburb where I live. South London has several, organised by deaneries or by parishes. Oxford has a large one, and in central London there are some notable ones, including one with crowds of young people, through the streets of Soho, starting from St Patrick's in Soho Square. A good number of Catholic primary schools to my knowledge have May crownings of Our Lady.
I think clown Masses attracted publicity but were never really a loved or deeply-rooted feature of most churches, and were a passing fad, now over.
I Have to say that, in 40 years of being a Catholic, I've never attended a single inappropriate Mass. That's to say, a Mass where a priest does something grossly silly or extreme, such as dressing up as a clown, or allowing the congregation to hold samples of wine in plastic chalices, which are then mass consecrated as the precious blood. I've heard of such happenings, of course, but I've never actually seen it with my own eyes.
Auntie has learned, with mingled pleasure and amusement, that her Blog annoys some people, especially angry dogmatic ones, and entertains and encourages others of a gentler sort. This has confirmed her decision to continue blogging although Auntie's life is busy and she has duties and responsibilities which on the whole she knows to be of more importance.
Auntie enjoys (although not neccesarily in this order)her work (writer, biographer, historian) and domestic duties, academic studies(Maryvale Institute), family, friends, and community responsibilities. She relishes the new translation of the Mass, the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, her own excellent local Catholic parish, traditional hymns (especially, perhaps, Anglican ones) rain, good literature, sleep, the English coast, Autumn, buttered toast, and a number of other things too precious and important to list here. She feels priviledged to belong to a Church which produced John Paul II and Benedict XVI and she finds their teachings an inspiration.
3 comments:
Some years ago you posted that you were sending some gold chocolate coins to your nieces and nephews for the Feast of St Nicholas of Bari. I thought this was a lovely idea and as I now have a 2 1/2 yo great niece I sent her a bag of gold coins. When she is a little older I will enclose in the parcel the story of St Nicholas and I hope to have grandchildren to send the coins to also.
Thank you for posting about this lovely idea. Traditions and pieties add colour to the cloth of the Faith. It is a pity that so much of the genuine colour was done away with after Vatican II e.g. Corpus Christi processions, May Crownings etc and when people began to hunger for they knew not what the traditional pieties were replaced by clown Masses, giant puppets and liturgical dancing.
Thank you for this. Last week I posted three bags of chocolate coins to three nieces, together with a box of turkish delight and a note about St Nicolas...
Corpus Christi processions are back - and in some cases never disappeared - at least in London. Just the other day we were discussing plans for our local one in 2010 in the suburb where I live. South London has several, organised by deaneries or by parishes. Oxford has a large one, and in central London there are some notable ones, including one with crowds of young people, through the streets of Soho, starting from St Patrick's in Soho Square. A good number of Catholic primary schools to my knowledge have May crownings of Our Lady.
I think clown Masses attracted publicity but were never really a loved or deeply-rooted feature of most churches, and were a passing fad, now over.
Greetings from one auntie to another!
Joanna
I Have to say that, in 40 years of being a Catholic, I've never attended a single inappropriate Mass. That's to say, a Mass where a priest does something grossly silly or extreme, such as dressing up as a clown, or allowing the congregation to hold samples of wine in plastic chalices, which are then mass consecrated as the precious blood. I've heard of such happenings, of course, but I've never actually seen it with my own eyes.
Post a Comment